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Booklist
[Starred] It's 1980, a hard-fought election year in which the
Iranian hostage crisis plays an increasingly critical role. But that intrigue
exists a world away from Foreign Service junior officer Tom Hurley, a cipher
hiding a cowardly episode of treachery in his past. He's coasting through a
dull-but-cushy appointment to the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo and targeting a CIA
operative's wife for a bit of dangerous fun. She blipped onto Hurley's radar
screen by asking him about the seemingly routine case of Lisa Countryman, a
U.S. tourist who disappeared after ditching an under-the-table job at a
fly-by-night English language school. The ensuing investigation takes Hurley
and clueless police detective Kenzo Ota into Tokyo's seediest corners. It also
forces both men to confront their many human failings, and possibly even
overcome them. Issues of race, class, and national identity drive this
clear-eyed story of closure, redemption, and carving out a place in the world.
Lee expertly weaves a tiny new pleasure into every page, from fascinating
forays into Japanese culture to wry lines in the vein of "People don't
have affairs to get out of their marriages. They have them to prolong
them." As satisfying as it is unsettling, this quiet literary triumph
eschews plot pyrotechnics for fully realized, deeply felt characters who
bumble and struggle their way toward grace much like the rest of us. Frank
Sennett
Copyright © American Library Association. All
rights reserved.
Publishers Weekly
[Starred] Ploughshares editor Lee uses the racial homogeneity of Japan as a
stark backdrop to this elegant first novel, a follow-up to his story
collection, Yellow. Set in Tokyo in 1980, the book centers on the
disappearance of Lisa Countryman, a half-Japanese, half-black Berkeley
graduate student who goes to Japan to research the "sad, brutal reign of
conformity" for her dissertation and, perhaps more importantly, embark on
an identity quest. Her mixed-race background gives her an exotic beauty, and
after a teaching job falls through, it lands her a job as a hostess girl at a
Tokyo men’s club. Echoes of Countryman’s identity crisis ring through the
lives of all the characters affected by her disappearance. When she vanishes,
it is first brought to the attention of Tom Hurley, a vain and careless junior
diplomat at the U.S. Embassy who tells people he’s Hawaiian, though he’s
really half-Korean and half-white. The case is turned over to Kenzo Ota, a
glum, divorced police inspector, who spent three hard years of his adolescence
in Missouri. Convinced that Countryman’s case could be just what he needs to
put his career back on track, Ota resolves to find out what happened to her.
The story of Countryman’s time in Japan and her efforts to learn who she is
unfolds parallel to Ota’s efforts to learn her fate. Through the
interlocking stories of Ota, Countryman and Hurley, Lee discourses on race,
identity, the Japanese sex trade, social conventions and law. Sharply
observed, at turns trenchantly funny and heartbreakingly sad, this novel could
be the breakout book for Lee. Agent, Maria Massie, Witherspoon Associates.
(July)
Forecast: The novel’s insights into the Japanese
sex industry make it a grittier counterpoint to Memoirs of a Geisha,
and its investigations of race and identity might, for some, recall White
Teeth. Five-city author tour.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.
Library Journal
Some mystery authors manage to create works of entertaining literary
fiction, but fewer are successful at using the form to examine social themes.
What makes Lee's (Yellow) work so satisfying is that while the mystery is used
as a frame to support issues of race, exploitation, and identity, the
narrative as a whole doesn't collapse under the weight of this literary
ambition. The story takes place in Japan at the close of 1980 and is
effectively told from the perspective of three characters Lisa Countryman, a
young American postgraduate of African American and Asian descent who goes
missing after getting mixed up in the country's sex clubs; Tom Hurley, the
junior officer at the U.S. consulate assigned to her case, who is of mixed
Asian American heritage and as a matter of convenience tells acquaintances
that he is Hawaiian; and lonely, beleaguered Japanese detective Kenzo Ota, who
ultimately undertakes the effort to locate Lisa. The characters are victims of
both perception and their own defense mechanisms, and their emotional
responses are consistently convincing. Highly recommended for all fiction
collections.—Edward Keane, Long Island Univ. Lib., Brooklyn, NY
Kirkus Reviews
A handful of restless, intertwining lives in 1980 Tokyo. Tom Hurley,
Junior Officer in American Citizens Services at the American Embassy in Tokyo,
receives a frantic call from a Richmond, Virginia, woman named Susan
Countryman. Susan's sister Lisa, a graduate student in anthropology visiting
Tokyo, hasn't contacted home in over a month, and Susan fears foul play.
There's not much Tom can do, but he conducts a (fruitless) cursory
investigation and gets in touch with the local police, who foist the dull
assignment off on obsessive/compulsive Assistant Inspector Kenzo Ota. Lee's
narrative jumps from Tom to Kenzo to Lisa, who, out of money and teaching
opportunities, takes several hostess jobs at a series of gentlemen's clubs,
each shabbier than the last. Womanizing Tom, on the rebound from a fling with
coworker Sarah, enters slowly into an affair with bored Julia Tinsley, wife of
CIA officer Vincent Kitamura. Their conversations about Lisa's case provide a
pretext for growing intimacy, and an accident from which they unwisely flee
bonds them in silence. Insomniac Kenzo, at first engaging in psychological
warfare with his landlady Saotome over the suitability of his apartment,
eventually opts instead to kill her with kindness. Deeper layers of longing
and hidden agendas gradually come to the fore. Kenzo's wife left him several
years ago and emigrated to America. She's recently returned to Japan with a
son named Simon. Realizing the boy must be his, Kenzo begins working out a
plan to meet him. Lisa may be working in the clubs not because she's
down-and-out, but because she's doing research. Tom, breaking with his usual
love-and-leave pattern, falls Julia, becoming more obsessed with her themore
ambivalence she displays. Thriller conventions draw the reader, like the
characters, into a gallery of human enigmas. First-novelist Lee (Yellow,
stories, 2001), the longtime editor of Ploughshares, leaves no fingerprints:
his cool, precise prose captures his characters without overexplaining them. Agent:
Maria Massie